Facebook cold on ‘dislike’ button, but mulling other ideas

SHAFAQNA – For all those times on Facebook when a “like” just doesn’t cut it, the company is thinking about adding more options, though probably not “dislike.”

“A lot of times, people share things that are sad, or tough cultural or social things,” CEO Mark Zuckerberg said Thursday. Giving users a tool to express a broader range of emotions like empathy or surprise might be a useful feature for people who don’t want to post a comment with their own words, he said.

But a standalone “dislike” button may not come, the Facebook chief said, partly due to the toxicity it may breed.

A dislike button may also inspire people to post less, which can’t be good for Facebook’s ads, though of course Zuckerberg didn’t say that.

The 30-year-old chief executive delivered his remarks during Facebook’s second public town hall event at its Menlo Park headquarters, that was streamed online. More than a dozen questions submitted from the Internet and taken from the audience were answered, covering everything from Facebook’s privacy policy, the international availability of search, to what Zuckerberg likes on this pizza. (It’s fried chicken.)

Facebook recently brought Graph Search, its tool for searching posts, to mobile and the desktop. But it’s still only available in English. International versions of the tool in other languages are in the works and should be coming soon, Zuckerberg said.

The executive also defended Facebook’s frequent updates to its privacy policy, saying they were needed to reflect changing technologies and the arrival of new products.

“Facebook used to be one product. Now it’s a company offering lots of different services,” Zuckerberg said. User location information is a particularly sensitive piece in that, he said, as new mobile features like “Nearby Friends” are released.

Zuckerberg also took a question from the audience about Facebook’s controversial “mood experiment,” in which the company tweaked the news feeds of some of its users to assess the impact on their moods. He stopped short of apologizing, though he did say it prompted the company to reflect on its internal processes for user experiments, and “tighten things up.” Facebook subsequently added new guidelinesto the research it conducts.